Here is a nice bit of data from Health Care for America NOW, which is a coalition of groups and unions supporting health care reform:
BTW The Kaiser Family Foundation is not associated with Kaiser Permanente.
http://blog.healthcareforamericanow.org/2010/03/12/polling-on-health-care-americans-closely-divided-support-increases-when-they-find-out-whats-in-the-bill/The polling on health reform has long been scattered and misunderstood. The issue is so complex that it's very hard to boil down into a few yes or no questions. And because the issue is so hot, every pollster and their mother wants to grab a headline with new poll results.
There are a few things that can be teased out, however. First, for the most part, people like what's in the health care bills.
Poll after poll finds support for banning denial of care based on pre-existing conditions, creating the Exchanges as a marketplace for health care, requiring business to pitch in for health care costs with tax credits to small business, closing the Medicare donut hole, and helping people afford insurance.
Newsweek's latest poll, taken in mid-February, backs up the assertion that people like the main components of the health care bill. Of course, some things aren't as popular - an individual mandate without a public option or the excise tax, for example - but Newsweek's poll has another finding that is noteworthy.
Second, when people find out what's in the bill, support for it rises. Newsweek's latest poll in mid-February found that while initial support for "Obama's health reform plan" were 40% favor to 49% opposed, once people learn what's in the bill - both the good and the bad - 48% support and 43% oppose. Kaiser tracking polls, among others, have had similar findings.
Third, people want to see reform passed more than they want Congress to fail or "start over."
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